Introduction
AUTOBIOGRAPHIES mainly concerned with the description of outer life events are today perhaps only written by statesmen, that is in a field where the external historical conditions aremore important for the reader than the man and his character itself. Only since Goethe's'Dichtung und Wahrheit' can we talk about real autobiographies, since only the author himself can report adequately, if at all, about the inner process of his maturing and about the ways of his feeling. Therefore, autobiographies have commanded the literary field in the West duringthe past century, when men have been apt and able to introvert in a systematic way and thus toexplore the vast field of their inner life. Such efforts have recently found their highest pitch inthe psychologist C. G. Jung's fascinating account of the ups-and-downs of his inner development even to the very depths of his unconscious.In India we find beginnings of such autobiographical statements as early as the Upanishadsand again in our own time, partly influenced by Western trends. Autobiographies by Yogishave been extremely rare, partly because the Yogi is well aware of the importance of keepingand living with a secret and partly because he properly shares the secret only with God and notwith the people in his surroundings who are less aware of the subtle workings of inner tendencies.Only in a few instances have great men of wisdom in India revealed themselves to us in self-descriptions, like Yogananda, Ramdas and Sivananda. In most cases it has been Westernerswho, because of their search for stimulation from a foreign way of self-introspection, havediscovered and published the achievements of the Indian masters of Yoga, so did Paul Bruntonreveal Ramana Maharishi to the West and also to India, and so Romain Rolland becamefascinated with Ramakrishna, Friedrich Heiler with Sadhu Sundar Singh, Annie Besant withKrishnamurti, Jean Herbert with Ramdas. Now James Hillman and F. J. Hopman havediscovered Gopi Krishna, whose sensational autobiography they help to publish and tointerpret in the psychological way.It remains for me, as an historian of world religions, to introduce this book by putting it intothe framework of Indian religious history. For Gopi Krishna is of unusual interest, first as anexample of a most thorough-going mixture of East and West, and secondly as a self-taught prophet of an original kind. Gopi Krishna's approach appears as a great surprise because in his book, except for the last chapter, there is no mention of spirituality, religion and metaphysics.Gopi Krishna's endeavours appear as a historical laboratory in which he, the author, developsgenuinely in himself what others have developed before him. But he re-mains independent of his fore-runners, who frequently have wound up in sterile intellectual formulae. By contrast,this self-taught, Guru-less author remains genuine in all his discoveries.Being exposed to Gopi Krishna's experiences is like meeting a space traveller who seeminglyfor no purpose has landed on a strange and unknown star without the standard equipment of the professional astronaut, and who simply reports about the bewildering landscape aroundhim, colourfully, truthfully, without really knowing exactly what he has found. We have here,in this wholly unintellectual personality, a classical example of a simple man, uneducated inYoga, who yet through intense labour and persistent enthusiasm, succeeds in achieving, if notSamadhi, yet some very high state in Yoga perfection, based entirely on his inner feelingdevelopment and not at all on ideas and traditions. Gopi Krishna is an extremely honestreporter, to the point of humbleness. Since he does not claim great powers and achievements,one is even more willing to accept his detailed descriptions of inner changes as exact reports.Thus, one of the consequences of his autonomous training is the aliveness of his account.To understand the amazing unusualness of Gopi Krishna's account one might try to imagine inturn the feelings of an Indian Yogi reading the records of a Westerner, who, as a layman,reports about his strange encounters with God and Christ without the background of theological knowledge and discipline and yet trying to find his own way through the labyrinth
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Hello PK Mishra, Thank you very much for posting this book in .pdf format. Hopefully I can imbibe some or anything at all. - Ravi